Tributes have been paid to a community champion who has died aged 89.

Audrey King, who was awarded the MBE in 1999 for services to the community and local communities, has been remembered by her family as a great organiser and motivator.

Audrey King of Penwortham, who has died aged 89

Daughter Angela Milner said: “She was extremely well-known in the local area. She had a great ability to get a group of people to do things together.

“She was also a great family person, and whatever the family got involved in, she got involved in.”

Mrs King raised money for Marie Curie Cancer Care, Christian Aid and International Aid, as well as St Catherine’s Hospice, which she supported for more than 25 years.

St Catherine’s Hospice volunteer Beryl Clark was a member of the Penwortham and Longton Hospice Support Group with Mrs King. The group raised funds to establish the hospice in the 1980s and continued to fundraise to develop the charity up until 2007.

Beryl said: “Audrey joined us in the mid-1980s and she became instrumental in organising a lot of fundraising events in Penwortham. As well as the larger, annual fundraisers, Audrey arranged coffee mornings and other small events in sheltered accommodation communities.

This was a fantastic idea because they helped to raise funds for the hospice, and they significantly benefited the elderly residents too.

“She worked so hard for her community and was very focused on helping people; she not only supported St Catherine’s, but other charities and her church too.

“She was a tremendous supporter and was an outstanding member of the fundraising group. She was amazing really, and she was such a lovely person.”

Stephen Greenhalgh, chief executive of St Catherine’s Hospice, said: “St Catherine’s simply wouldn’t be here if it wasn’t for the determined efforts and commitment of people like Audrey, who contributed to such a mammoth fundraising mission in the early days.

"The charity is inspired by local people, for local people, and thanks to Audrey and the countless others who have supported the hospice and continue to do so, St Catherine’s is here to help local people to have quality of life, to the end of life.”

Mrs King was born in Widnes and qualified as teacher, specialising in English and RE. Having moved around the country with husband Ken who was part of the Church Army, the family settled in Penwortham in 1960 when Ken joined the Lancashire Probation Service.